ISS astronauts find huge ice circles in Lake Baikal

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silylene

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Interesting mystery, and shows the power of human observation:

Astronauts Spot Mysterious Ice Circles in World’s Deepest Lake
By Betsy Mason May 26, 2009 |
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2...ysterious-ice-circles-in-worlds-deepest-lake/
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Astronauts aboard the International Space Station noticed two mysterious dark circles in the ice of Russia’s Lake Baikal in April. Though the cause is more likely aqueous than alien, some aspects of the odd blemishes defy explanation.

The two circles are the focal points for ice break-up and may be caused by upwelling of warmer water in the lake. The dark color of the circles is due to thinning of the ice, which usually hangs around into June. Upwelling wouldn’t be strange in some relatively shallow areas of the lake where hydrothermal activity has been detected, such as where the circle near the center of the lake (pictured below) is located. Circles have been seen in that area before in 1985 and 1994, though they weren’t nearly as pronounced. But the location of the circle near the southern tip of the lake (pictured above) where water is relatively deep and cold is puzzling.

The lake itself is an oddity. It is the largest by volume and the deepest (5370 feet at its deepest point), as well as one of the oldest at around 25 million years. The photo above was taken by an astronaut from the ISS. The photo below was taken by NASA’s MODIS satellite instrument.
[see the two yellow arrows pointing to ice circles]
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3488

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I agree Wayne.

That is very interesting.

I have actually flown over Lake Baikal twice at hight altitude approx 11,000 metres going to China, once in September when it's a huge expanse & in March when completely ice covered. Fortunately both times were in daylight & it was cloudless. It is a HUGE lake.

Thanks Silylene.
 
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silylene

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When I found this story, my wish was that we could find some ice rings like this someday on Mars, or even Enceladus, or Europa...(dream on!) If we ever did, it would most likely be on Mars, if a geologically active hot spot was somewhere under the polar cap.

Maybe there is an ice ring on Antarctica somewhere? I suspect not, the ice is way too thick.
 
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